Of course, a good pup comes out of good
(proven) parents, a clean kennel and a careful breeding program
of a reputable breeder. Backyard litters seldom have the desired
density of superior genes to be worth considering as a
performance hunting dog. The best pup of the litter is the one
you like best. Usually you can't predict a pup's natural ability
at pickup-time. So go with what you like: color, temperament,
size, etc. The bully of the litter is not always the best! Of
course, pay close attention to undesirable traits, such as
extreme dependence on litter mates (pup will never go somewhere
alone!), shyness of "normal" situations (humans, other dogs,
especially moving objects!) and any bodily fault.
Early development
According to scientists studying dog
psychology, the young dog goes through several stages of
imprinting. The most important and critical period to imprint
your pup is between week 6 and 12. Generally, the sooner the dog
comes into your home, the better, but there are disadvantages:
The younger pup will be more prone to diseases and malnutrition.
Also, it's a good idea to have the pup experience the first
traumatic events (vaccination, tattooing) in the safety of the
kennel with Mom and its litter mates. I personally like to pick
up a pup at 8 weeks, but not later than 10-11 weeks. I always
take my newly acquired pups inside the house. The worst you can
do to a young pup is to lock him up in a cold unfamiliar kennel
- he'll get the lonely bed blues! Never put him into a kennel
with other dogs, no matter how "nice" the may be with junior!
The best way to get your pup over the first days after leaving
Mom is to take him inside your house and "use" his desire for
warmth, contact and affection by giving him all these things,
hereby bonding him to you. He will readily accept you as his new
Mom and will look for your company!
House-keeping rules
From the first moment when junior gets inside
your home there should be a set of rules he (and YOU!) adhere to
at all times. Give him a place of his own (a crate that can be
closed works best!) where he is expected to sleep and stay when
you have no time for him. I personally take my pups into bed
with me at night for the first month or so - simulating the
environment he would grow up in hadn't you ripped him away from
Mom! Personal body contact is what he needs most. Let him sleep
on your lap, play with him on the floor, etc. -just touch him a
lot. This will teach him the most important lesson of his life:
Daddy is always good to me. During the day, junior should be
sleeping in his crate, and when he wakes up, you should CARRY
him outside to take care of his "business".
Pups have very little control over their
bladders, so they should be let out every 2-3 hours at least
during the day, and once or twice during the night. If you keep
taking him out at the right time, he will NEVER mess in the
house. It's your fault if he leaves a puddle on the rug. If the
disaster has happened, however, do not treat junior harshly: a
short shake and "NO" and out he goes to his usual doggie-john.
Remember to praise him every time he does "his job" outside!
Playtime
Playing is the best way to give your pup a
lot of confidence and love for you. If you can't play with a pup
he'll become socially retarded, or may turn to be very
independent or even into a fighter. Many dogs that grew up in
the isolation of a kennel never learned to have fun with their
handler, so they bugger off to find their excitement someplace
else. I try not to let my pups play much with other dogs - they
tune into a dog world and not into the human environment. The
imprinting on humans creates dogs that are at home in both
worlds. Any well socialized dog will always be trustworthy with
other dogs, - which is not true for the opposite! Playtime
creates cooperativeness and fine-tunes your pup into your
personality.
Playing is also the best way to schedule
juniors activity to the times when you have time for him; play
before you need some time off, so he's asleep and
out-of-the-way. Toys are a good distraction, but he should only
have one or two - chewable if at all possible (no wood or
plastic that can splinter!), all other items are off-limits.
When you play with him, use HIS toys and nothing else. If he
accidentally gets into some of your shoes etc., grab him gently
by the neck, shake him in front of the item he wasn't supposed
to touch, tell him "NO" and immediately start a new play with
HIS toy. He'll learn to distinguish good from bad only when they
are close together!
When playing, you should play like a dog,
i.e. wrestle with junior. He loves to roll all over the floor
with you, so get down to his level as often as you can. If he
get's to rough, whine sharply - most likely he'll stop right
away. After all, that's the response he got from his litter
mates, so he should know it. He'll quickly learn that your "cry"
means for him to soften up. This is very helpful if junior
should ever get a bit rough with kids! If, however, he's not
easily discouraged from biting your hands to pieces, grab him by
the neck, shake him briefly and tell him "easy", then continue
playing at a reduced excitement level. Fortunately, he'll tire
quickly after a romp in the yard or house and then is likely to
sleep for 1-3 hours (your free time!).
Conditioning or Training?
From day one, I use a whistle signal (double
blast on a non-trilling whistle) and the dog's name whenever I
want to call him. Get on your knees and call junior to you,
praise and play when he comes to you. Before I put down his food
dish in front of him, I always whistle the "come" signal, this
will make him associate the signal with something pleasant. The
idea behind this "conditioning" is to create associations
between behaviors and rewards. In conditioning the dog "teaches
himself", like what clues provide him with food etc. A good
example is the young dog that runs to the front door when you
take his leash: he has learned to associate your intent to take
him for a walk (grabbing the leash) with the "exit". To the
unconditioned dog, taking the leash means nothing because both
leash and door are unrelated. Conditioning stands in contrast to
actual "force-training" where you will teach him certain
behaviors by dominance and physical stimulation. For example,
you will tap his rump with a switch to teach him sit, - you
actually force him to comply with your wishes. Of course any
kind of force is inappropriate for a little pup, but he's not
too young to learn by conditioning! If done properly, you can
teach a young dog a lot of life's essential lessons by
conditioning alone. As he get's older, conditioning gradually
merges into a force training program, but certain tasks will
always remain strict conditioning exercises, such as blood
tracking. No force in the world will make your dog track a
wounded deer - only his conditioned response to the smell of
blood (excitement, knowing there will be food, etc.) will make
him track. The beauty of conditioned responses is that they are
more or less fixed and not dependent on handler influences. A
dog that has been conditioned properly will perform the task
even when miles away from the handler, or under a new owner. He
taught himself, so the handler is not important for the
performance. Of course, there are many subjects you cannot teach
by conditioning, that's where force training comes into play. A
good example is retrieving: All my young pups are conditioned to
chase and retrieve bumpers to hand, and they all will do this
enthusiastically. At this time the pup retrieves reliably as
long as he has fun doing it, which can be very long. And I
almost bet that he doesn't have to have a strong retrieving
instinct or be a "natural" retriever (which doesn't exist!). A
good conditioning program will make him have fun while
retrieving! But, you can't make him retrieve yet. However, once
the pup gets to be 7 months old, he'll get force trained to
retrieve, no matter if he has fun doing it or not. The need for
force breaking may be dependent on the individual dog owner, to
me it's indispensable.
In order for conditioning to be most
effective, you should avoid under all circumstances to
physically punish a pup personally. It does NOT mean that you
shouldn't help him to teach himself to behave. The major
difference is that you never appear as the threatening, bad guy
that hurts little puppy dogs! It is critical that you remain
extremely friendly during these early stages of learning. Junior
should learn that the world turns ugly if he doesn't follows
Dad's advice, but it's never Dad who is unpleasant. If he
steals from the table, the table will bite back (mouse trap!)
and immediately Daddy will call him and be very comforting. Or,
if he scratches the door, a key ring will "jump" from the wall
and scare him back to Daddy, who is extremely happy to see him.
I call this the "GOD-EFFECT" because the young dog should not
associate discomfort or "punishment" with the handler, but
rather some mysterious force out there in the unfriendly world.
He will learn that your "come"-command is a warning of some
nasty thing that will happen to him (a handful of BB's peppered
on this rump, for example!), and he can only get away from it by
running to the shelter of your arms. Use situations to your
advantage by calling him when you are sure he won't respond AND
when you have the means to make him "obey" by scaring him back
to you. Don't overdo it, but keep a constant schedule of
conditioning experiences. Of course, conditioning also applies
to the "NO" command, and -very importantly! - to the leash work.
Junior should be exposed to the leash as soon as possible. When
you reach for the leash and attach it to his collar he should be
very happy - this means we're going someplace (incidentally, we
never leave the house without being leashed and we spend most of
our puppy time outside on a leash). Later the leash is your most
important training tool, so it pays to make the dog love it
above all things! Of course, we don't require junior to walk at
a perfect "heel" right away, but we can already introduce some
basics: Never let him chew on a leash (you're training young
Houdini that way). Never let him win a fight against the leash.
Never punish him with a leash (at least not when he's a little
pup!) Make him walk at your left side and show him that running
between your legs may be painful (with immediate praise and
petting after he got stepped on). As he grows, he should pull
less and less on the leash, and when he's 4-5 months old he
should heel nicely without pulling, etc. Another early
conditioning experience involves the "SIT" command: when he sits
voluntary praise him while giving the "SIT" command (this is
what other trainers call the "overlay" technique: you "overlay"
the command over the behavior at the right time).
The reason why I'm so serious about the
conditioning business is, because it facilitates force training
so much. A dog that trusts the handler from puppyhood on will
never get handshy, leash-wise or develop the arrogant attitude
you often see in poorly socialized dogs. Even when you have to
punish him, he'll trust you because deep in his brain there is a
burnt-in message: "When in trouble, Daddy is my best buddy!"
Field experience
Of course, junior should go into the field as
soon as possible. There he will learn different smells, terrain,
animals and water. A great deal of conditioning takes place in
the field, and a lot of "preferences" of a dog for certain game
or habitats stem from childhood play in the woods. Initially, a
pup's field of vision is limited (ca 30 yards in a 10 week old
pup) so make sure he doesn't get lost. Show him interesting
things, such as fresh tracks, birds, etc. Bring him up to a
planted bird and let him chase it. Let him chase bumpers or
balls, a bird wing on a string, etc. The more he sees, smells
and hears the less trouble you will have with keeping his
concentration later on. A pup that has "seen it all" is much
easier to train! This is also the time to introduce him to
gunshots, dead game, pasture animals, etc. He should learn to
ride in the vehicle (always in a crate, never loose in the back
of the truck!) as soon as possible.
Tracking is another thing I like to introduce
right away. Make a little soupy sauce from his dinner, and lay a
short (10-30 yards) trail by dripping a drop of dinner-soup onto
the ground every 5-10 inches. Place his dish at the end (always
hidden behind a tree or shrub!), walk back to the house in a
wide circle (without crossing the trail!) and put junior
on a long leash and a non-choking, soft collar. Keep him short
on the leash and show him the start of the trail by pointing to
the first soup spot, then let him follow the trail. If he strays
off the trail, stop immediately, holding the leash firmly.
Junior will now swing back and forth in front of you "like a
pendulum". The moment he crosses the trail, gently give him some
"rein" and thus help him onto the trail. Once at the end, praise
him a lot and let him eat. A few of these trails, and you have
laid the ground work for diligent nose work, cooperation and
above all, concentration on scenting. Also, you can use
situations when junior is a few yards away and not paying
attention to you, to quickly disappear from his view. Sooner or
later he will start tracking you down, and gets rewarded by an
enthusiastic reception if he finds you. A dog that has been
introduced to tracking from early on will never fail the rabbit
track, or the drags as required in the performance tests of the
German system. Unfortunately, too many dogs get exposed to their
first drag when they are in their second year - much too late to
"educate" a reliable tracker. The early bird catches the worm!
Lastly, don't be disappointed if junior doesn't point right
away. If he wants to grab things rather that point that's OK -
in fact I prefer the gung-ho kind of a dog over the overly
cautious canine that points out of insecurity. Pointing is
mostly a training subject anyway, so he will learn it, just like
the retrieving. You should concentrate on schooling his nose by
letting him track, find birds, etc. Expose him to all kinds of
birds (not only one species) and mammals.